One of the most pressing problems of infantry armament that arose in the First World War was the presence of a light machine gun capable of operating in all types of combat and in any conditions in infantry battle formations, providing direct fire support to the infantry. During the war, Russia acquired light machine guns (“machine guns”) from other states. However, the French Shosh machine guns, as well as the English Lewis guns, which had a more successful design, were worn out by the mid-1920s, the systems of these machine guns were outdated, and in addition, there was a catastrophic shortage of spare parts. The planned production of the Madsen machine gun (Denmark) for the Russian cartridge in 1918 at the plant formed in the city of Kovrov did not take place. In the early 20s, the issue of developing a light machine gun was put as a priority in the red army's armament system - according to generally accepted views, it was this machine gun that made it possible to solve the problem of combining movement and fire at the level of small units in the new conditions. The machine gun became the basis for the new "group tactics" of the infantry. In 22, "model" ("ostentatious") companies were formed whose main task was the cultivation of group tactics, as well as the saturation of the infantry with automatic weapons, which were catastrophically lacking. When in 1924, according to the new states, a machine-gun section was introduced into all rifle platoons, due to a shortage of light machine guns, it had to be armed with one heavy machine gun and one light machine gun. Work on a light machine gun was deployed at the First Tula Arms Plants, the Kovrov Machine Gun Plant and the Shot training range. In Tula F. V. Tokarev and at the courses "Shot" I. N. Kolesnikov, as a temporary solution to the problem, created an air-cooled light machine gun - like MG.08 / 18 (Germany) - the serially produced easel "Maxim" was taken as a basis. KB Kovrovsky plant carried out work in the long term. In this design bureau, under the leadership of Fedorov and his student Degtyarev, experimental work was carried out on a unified family of 6, 5-mm automatic weapons. The Fedorov assault rifle was taken as a basis (it should be noted that the "automatic" itself was originally called a "light machine gun", that is, it was considered not as an individual weapon, but as a lightweight light machine gun for arming small infantry groups). Within the framework of this family, several variants of light, easel, "universal", aviation and tank machine guns have been developed with various schemes for cooling the barrel and power supply. However, none of the Fedorov's or Fedorov-Degtyarev's universal or light machine guns were accepted for mass production.
Vasily Alekseevich Degtyarev (1880-1949), the head of the workshop of the PKB of the Kovrov plant, began to develop his own model of a light machine gun at the end of 1923. As a basis, Degtyarev took the scheme of his own automatic carbine, which he proposed back in 1915. Then the inventor, combining the well-known schemes of gas venting automation (a side vent located at the bottom of the barrel), locking the barrel with two lugs raised by a drummer and his own solutions, received a compact system that earned Fedorov's approving official review. July 22, 1924Degtyarev presented the first prototype of a machine gun with a disk magazine. The commission was headed by N. V. Kuibyshev, head of the Shot school, Chairman of the Shooting Committee of the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army. The commission noted "the outstanding originality of the idea, the rate of fire, the trouble-free operation and the considerable ease of use of Comrade Degtyarev's system." It should be noted that at the same time the commission recommended a coaxial 6, 5-millimeter Fedorov-Degtyarev machine gun for adoption by the Air Force of the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army. The prototype of the Degtyarev machine gun and the Kolesnikov and Tokarev machine guns were tested on October 6, 1924 at the shooting range in Kuskovo, but dropped out of the competition, since the firing pin was out of order. The commission for the selection of a model of a light machine gun (chairman S. M. Budyonny) was soon recommended for the adoption of the Red Army machine gun Maxim-Tokarev. It was adopted under the designation MT in 1925.
DP light machine gun
The next prototype was presented by Degtyarev in the fall of 1926. On September 27-29, about five thousand shots were fired from two copies, while the ejector and striker were found to have weak strength, and the weapon itself is sensitive to dust. In December, the next two machine guns were tested in unfavorable shooting conditions, they gave only 0.6% delays for 40,000 shots, but they were also returned for revision. At the same time, an improved Tokarev model and the German "light machine gun" Dreise were tested. The Degtyarev sample, according to the test results, surpassed the Tokarev rework system and the Dreise machine gun, which then aroused great interest among the leadership of the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army and, by the way, had an option with a large-capacity disk magazine. Despite this, Degtyarev had to make a number of changes in his design: thanks to a change in shape and the use of chromium-nickel steel, the bolt carrier was strengthened, the piston rod and ejector were made of the same steel, to strengthen the striker, he was given a shape close to the shape of the drummer of a Lewis machine gun. It should be noted that some design solutions in Degtyarev's machine guns were made under the obvious influence of the thoroughly studied Madsen, Lewis and Hotchkiss light machine guns (the Kovrov plant possessed complete sets of drawings, as well as ready-made Madsen samples, during the Civil War Lewis machine guns were repaired here). However, in general, the weapon had a new and original design. Two copies of the Degtyarev machine gun, after revision, were tested by the Commission of the Artkom of the Artillery Directorate of the Red Army at the Kovrov plant on January 17-21, 1927. The machine guns were deemed to have “passed the test”. On February 20, the Commission also recognized "it is possible to present machine guns as samples for all subsequent work and considerations for installing them in production." Without waiting for the results of the improvements, it was decided to issue an order for one hundred machine guns. On March 26, the Artkom approved the Temporary TUs for the acceptance of the Degtyarev light machine gun developed by the design bureau of the Kovrov plant.
The first batch of 10 machine guns was presented to the military acceptance on November 12, 1927, the military inspector fully accepted the batch of 100 machine guns on January 3, 1928. On January 11, the Revolutionary Military Council ordered the transfer of 60 machine guns for military trials. In addition, machine guns were sent to military educational institutions of various military districts, so that, simultaneously with the tests, the command staff could get acquainted with the new weapons during camp gatherings. Military and field tests continued throughout the year. According to the results of tests carried out in February at the Scientific and Testing Weapon and Machine Gun Range and the Shot courses, it was recommended to add a flame arrester to the design, designed to reduce the unmasking and blinding effects of the muzzle flame at dusk and at night. In addition, a number of other comments were made. In August 1928, an improved sample was tested with a flame arrester and a slightly modified nozzle of the gas chamber regulator. On 27-28, they issued an order for 2, 5 thousand machine guns. At the same time, at a special meeting on June 15, 1928, in which the heads of the Main Military-Industrial Directorate and the People's Commissariat of Defense took part, recognizing the difficulties of setting up large-scale production of a new machine gun, they set 29-30 years as the deadline for its establishment with completely interchangeable parts. At the end of 28, it was decided to stop the production of MT (Maxim-Tokarev) machine guns. As a result, the Degtyarev light machine gun hit the Red Army before its official adoption. The machine gun was adopted under the designation "7, 62-mm light machine gun mod. 1927 " or DP ("Degtyareva, infantry"), the designation DP-27 was also encountered. The Degtyarev machine gun became the first mass machine gun of domestic development and brought its author to the ranks of the main and most authoritative gunsmiths in the country.
The main parts of the machine gun: replaceable barrel with a flame arrester and a gas chamber; receiver with sighting device; cylindrical barrel casing with front sight and guide tube; bolt with a drummer; bolt carrier and piston rod; reciprocating combat spring; trigger frame with butt and trigger; disk store; foldable removable bipod.
The barrel in the receiver was fastened with intermittent screw protrusions; a flag closure was used for fixing. On the middle part of the barrel, there were 26 transverse ribs designed to improve cooling. However, in practice, it turned out that the efficiency of this radiator was very low and, starting in 1938, the fins were removed, which simplified production. A conical flame arrester was attached to the muzzle of the barrel using a threaded connection. During the march, the flame arrester was fastened in an inverted position to reduce the length of the DP.
And the automatics of the machine gun implemented a scheme of work due to the removal of powder gases through the side hole. The hole was made in the barrel wall at a distance of 185 millimeters from the muzzle. The gas piston had a long stroke. The gas chamber is of an open type, with a branch pipe. The piston rod is rigidly connected to the bolt carrier and the reciprocating spring, put on the rod, was placed under the barrel in a guide tube. The gas piston was screwed onto the front end of the rod, while fixing the reciprocating mainspring. With the help of a branch pipe regulator having two gas outlet openings with a diameter of 3 and 4 millimeters, the amount of discharged powder gases was adjusted. The barrel bore was locked using a pair of lugs mounted on the sides of the bolt on hinges and spread by the extended rear part of the striker.
The trigger mechanism consisted of a trigger, a trigger with a sear, an automatic safety device. The trigger was propped up with a fuse at the back. To turn it off, you need to completely cover the neck of the butt with your palm. USM was designed only for continuous fire.
The store, mounted on top of the receiver, consisted of a pair of discs and a spring. The cartridges in the store were placed along the radius with the bullet toe to the center. With the effort of a cochlear spiral spring, which was twisted when the magazine was loaded, the upper disk rotated relative to the lower one, while cartridges were fed to the receiver window. The store of this design was developed earlier for the Fedorov air machine. Initially, the requirements for the light machine gun assumed that the power supply system would have 50 rounds, but the Fedorov disk magazine designed for fifty 6, 5 mm rounds was ready for production, it was decided to keep its basic dimensions, reducing the drum capacity to 49 7, 62mm rounds. It is necessary to answer that the design of the store with the radial placement of cartridges was able to solve the problem of the reliability of the power supply system when using a domestic rifle cartridge with a protruding rim of the sleeve. However, the magazine capacity was soon reduced to 47 rounds because the spring force was not enough to feed the last rounds. Radial punching discs and annular stiffening ribs were designed to reduce their death during shocks and impacts, as well as to reduce the likelihood of "jamming" of the store. A spring-loaded magazine latch was mounted in the sight block. On the march, the receiver window of the receiver was covered with a special flap, which moved forward before installing the store. A special PSM device was used to equip the store. It should be noted that a magazine with a diameter of 265 millimeters created some inconvenience when carrying a machine gun during a battle. After using up part of the ammunition, the remaining cartridges created a noticeable noise while moving. In addition, the weakening of the spring led to the fact that the last cartridges remained in the store - because of this, the calculations preferred not to fully equip the store.
As in many machine guns, designed for significant heating of the barrel and intense firing in bursts, the shot was fired from the rear sear. The bolt carrier with the bolt before the first shot was in the rear position, held by the sear, while the reciprocating combat spring was compressed (the compression force was 11 kgf). When the trigger was pressed, the trigger lowered, the bolt carrier broke off the sear and moved forward, pushing the bolt and the striker with its vertical strut. The bolt captured the cartridge from the receiver, sent it to the chamber, resting on the stump of the barrel. During the further movement of the bolt carrier, the drummer pushed the lugs with his broadened part, the support planes of the lugs entered the lugs of the receiver. This locking scheme was very reminiscent of the Swedish Chelman automatic rifle, which was tested in Russia in 1910 (although the rifle combined locking according to the "Freeberg-Chelman scheme" and automation based on barrel recoil with a short stroke). The drummer and the bolt carrier, after locking, continued to move forward another 8 millimeters, the striker's firing pin reached the cartridge primer, breaking it, a shot occurred. After the bullet passed the gas vents, powder gases entered the gas chamber, hit the piston, which covered the chamber with its bell, and threw the bolt carrier back. After the drummer passed the frame of about 8 millimeters, he released the lugs, after which the lugs were reduced by the bevels of the figured recess of the frame, on the way of 12 millimeters, the barrel bore was unlocked, the bolt was picked up by the bolt carrier and retracted. At the same time, a spent cartridge case was removed with an ejector, which, hitting the drummer, was thrown through the receiver window in the lower part. The bolt travel was 149 millimeters (the bolt was 136 millimeters). After that, the bolt carrier hit the trigger frame and went forward under the action of the reciprocating mainspring. If at this moment the trigger was pressed, the automatic cycle was repeated. If the hook was released, the bolt carrier rose to the sear with its combat platoon, stopping in the rear position. At the same time, the machine gun was ready for the next shot - the presence of only one automatic trigger fuse created the danger of an involuntary shot while moving with a loaded machine gun. In this regard, the instructions stated that the machine gun should be loaded only after taking a position.
The machine gun was equipped with a sector sight with a high block, which was attached to the receiver, and a bar with notches up to 1500 meters (100 m pitch), and a front sight with protective "ears". The front sight was inserted into a groove on the protrusion of the barrel casing, which resembled the casing of a Madsen light machine gun. The magazine latch also served as protective "ears" for the sight. The wooden butt was made like a Madsen machine gun, had a semi-pistol neck protrusion and an upper ridge, which improved the positioning of the machine gunner's head. The length of the butt from the trigger to the back of the head was 360 millimeters, the width of the butt was 42 millimeters. The butt housed an oil can. In the wider lower part of the butt of the DP-27 machine gun, there was a vertical channel intended for the rear retractable support, but serial machine guns were produced without such a support, and subsequently the channel in the butt was no longer performed. On the barrel shroud and on the left side of the butt, sling swivels for the belt were attached. The bipods were fastened with a folding collar with a thumbscrew on the barrel shroud, their legs were equipped with openers.
The machine gun showed good accuracy when firing: the core of dispersion during firing with "normal" bursts (from 4 to 6 shots) at a distance of 100 meters was up to 170 mm (in height and width), at 200 meters - 350 mm, at 500 meters - 850 mm, at 800 meters - 1600 mm (in height) and 1250 mm (in width), for 1,000 m - 2100 mm (in height) and 1850 mm (in width). During firing in short bursts (up to 3 shots), the accuracy increased - for example, at a distance of 500 meters, the core of dispersion was already equal to 650 mm, and at 1,000 m - 1650x1400 mm.
Red Army soldiers near a dugout in Stalingrad are busy cleaning weapons, PPSh-41 submachine guns and DP-27 machine gun
The DP machine gun consisted of 68 parts (without a magazine), of which 4 coil springs and 10 screws (for comparison - the number of parts of the German Dreise light machine gun was 96, the American Browning BAR model 1922 - 125, the Czech ZB-26 - 143). The use of the bolt carrier as the bottom cover of the receiver, as well as the application of the principle of multifunctionality when using other parts, made it possible to significantly reduce the weight and dimensions of the structure. The advantages of this machine gun also included the simplicity of its disassembly. The machine gun could be disassembled into large parts, and with the removal of the bolt carrier, the main parts were separated. Belonging to the Degtyarev machine gun included a collapsible ramrod, a brush, two drifts, a screwdriver wrench, a device for cleaning gas paths, a wiper, an extractor for torn off muzzle sleeves (the situation with a rupture of sleeves in the chamber of a machine gun of the Degtyarev system was observed for a long time). Spare barrels - two for a machine gun - were supplied to the special. boxes. A canvas cover was used to carry and store the machine gun. To fire blank cartridges, a muzzle sleeve with an outlet diameter of 4 millimeters and a special magazine with a window for blank cartridges were used.
The production of DP series machine guns was supplied and carried out by the Kovrovsky plant (State Union Plant named after K. O. Kirkizha, plant # 2 of the People's Commissariat of Arms, since 1949 - Plant named after V. A. Degtyarev). Infantry Degtyarev was distinguished by its simplicity of manufacture - for its production, it required two times less measurements and transitions than for a revolver, and three times less than for a rifle. The number of technological operations was four times less than for the Maxim machine gun and three times less than for MT. Degtyarev's many years of experience as a practitioner gunsmith and cooperation with the outstanding gunsmith V. G. Fedorov. In the process of setting up production, changes were made to the heat treatment of the most critical parts, to introduce new processing norms, to select grades of steel. It can be assumed that one of the main roles in ensuring the required accuracy during the large-scale production of automatic weapons with complete interchangeability of parts was played by cooperation in the 1920s with German specialists, machine-tool and arms firms. Fedorov invested a lot of labor and energy in setting up the production of the Degtyarev machine gun and in standardizing the production of weapons on this basis - during this work, the so-called "Fedorov's normals" were introduced into production, that is, a system of landings and tolerances designed to increase the accuracy of weapons production. A great contribution to the organization of the production of this machine gun was made by the engineer G. A. Aparin, who supplied tool and pattern production at the plant.
Soldiers of the Soviet 115th Infantry Division A. Konkov in a trench on Nevskaya Dubrovka. Machine gunner V. Pavlov with DP-27 machine gun in the foreground
The DP order for 1928 and 1929 was already 6, 5 thousand units (of which 500 tank, 2000 aviation and 4000 infantry). After tests in March-April 30 of the year by a special commission of 13 serial Degtyarev machine guns for survivability, Fedorov stated that “the survivability of the machine gun was raised to 75-100 thousand shots”, and “the survivability of the least resistant parts (strikers and ejectors) to 25-30 thousand. shots.
In the 1920s, in different countries, various light machine guns with store food were created - the French "Hotchkiss" mod. 1922 and Мle 1924 "Chatellerault", Czech ZB-26, English "Vickers-Berthier", Swiss "Solothurn" М29 and "Furrer" М25, Italian "Breda", Finnish М1926 "Lahti-Zaloranta", Japanese "Type 11" … The Degtyarev machine gun compared to most of them favorably distinguished itself by its relatively high reliability and a larger magazine capacity. Note that simultaneously with the DP, another important means of supporting the infantry was adopted - the 76-mm regimental cannon of the 1927 model.
Soviet machine-gun crew at a firing position among the ruins of Stalingrad
Technical characteristics of the DP machine gun:
Cartridge - 7, 62-mm model 1908/30 (7, 62x53);
Machine gun weight (without cartridges): without bipods - 7, 77 kg, with bipods - 8, 5 kg;
Barrel weight - 2.0 kg;
Bipod weight - 0, 73 kg;
Machine gun length: without a flash suppressor - 1147 mm, with a flash suppressor - 1272 mm;
Barrel length - 605 mm;
Length of the rifled barrel - 527 mm;
Rifling - 4 rectangular, right-handed;
Rifling stroke length - 240 mm;
Bullet muzzle velocity - 840 m / s (for a light bullet);
Sighting range - 1500 m;
The range of a direct shot at the chest figure - 375 m;
The range of the lethal action of the bullet is 3000 m;
Sighting line length - 616.6 mm;
Rate of fire - 600 rounds per minute;
Combat rate of fire - 100-150 rounds per minute;
Food - disc magazine with a capacity of 47 rounds;
Magazine weight - 1, 59 kg (without cartridges) / 2, 85 kg (with cartridges);
The height of the line of fire - 345-354 mm;
Calculation - 2 people.
YES, DT and others
Since by the time the DP was adopted in service in the Soviet Union, the need to unify machine guns was recognized, on the basis of the Degtyarev machine gun, other types were developed - primarily aviation and tank. Here again the experience of developing Fedorov's unified weapons came in handy.
On May 17, 1926, the Artkom approved those. assignment for the design of a unified rapid-fire machine gun, which would be used as a light machine gun in cavalry and infantry, and synchronous and turret in aviation. But the creation of an aviation machine gun on the basis of an infantry one turned out to be more realistic. The practice of "converting" a light machine gun into a mobile aircraft (on pivot, single turret, twin turret mounts) was used during the First World War. In the period from December 27 to February 28, tests of the aircraft version of the Degtyarev machine gun ("Degtyareva, aviation", DA) were carried out. The Scientific and Technical Committee of the Air Force Directorate of the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army considered it "possible to approve the submitted sample" of the Degtyarev machine gun for registration in the serial order plan. In 1928, simultaneously with the fixed PV-1 machine gun designed by A. V. Nadashkevich, created on the basis of the Maxim heavy machine gun, the air force adopted the DA turret aircraft machine gun, which has a three-row (three-tier) magazine for 65 rounds, a pistol grip, and new sighting devices with a weather vane.
Marines, planted on artillery tractors T-20 "Komsomolets", In the photo you can see the diesel fuel. Sevastopol, September 1941
A faceplate was screwed to the front of the receiver of the Degtyarev aircraft machine gun. In its lower part, a pivot was attached, which has a curved swivel for attachment to the installation. Instead of a stock, a notched wooden pistol grip and a rear grip were installed. A bushing with an annular sight was fixed in front of the top, a bushing with a stand for a weather vane was attached to the thread in the muzzle of the barrel. Since the casing was removed and the faceplate was installed, there were changes in the fastening of the gas piston guide tube. The top of the store was equipped with a belt handle for quick and easy changing. To ensure firing in a limited volume, as well as to prevent the spent cartridges from falling into the mechanisms of the aircraft, a canvas sleeve-catcher with a wire frame and a lower fastener was installed on the receiver from the bottom of the receiver. Note that to search for the best configuration of the frame, which will ensure reliable removal of the sleeves without jamming, in domestic practice, almost for the first time, slow motion filming was used. The mass of the DA machine gun was 7.1 kg (without a magazine), the length from the edge of the rear handle to the muzzle was 940 mm, the mass of the magazine was 1.73 kg (without cartridges). As of March 30, 1930, units of the air force of the Red Army had 1, 2 thousand DA machine guns and a thousand machine guns were prepared for delivery.
In 1930, the DA-2 twin turret installation also entered service - its development based on the Degtyarev aircraft machine gun was ordered by the Scientific and Technical Committee of the Air Force Directorate in 1927 to the Weapon and Machine Gun Trust. The faceplate, located in front of the receiver, on each machine gun was replaced by a front mount clutch. The side lugs of the couplings were used for fastening to the installation, and the lower ones were used to hold the gas piston tube. The rear mount of the machine guns on the installation was the tie bolts passing through the holes made in the rear tides of the receiver. The development of the installation was attended by N. V. Rukavishnikov and I. I. Bezrukov. The general trigger hook was installed on the pistol grip of the right machine gun in an additional trigger guard. The trigger rod was attached to the trigger guard holes. The rod consisted of an adjusting rod and a connecting shaft. On the left machine gun, the safety flag and the bolt handle were transferred not to the left side, a bracket for a weather vane was installed on its barrel. Since the recoil of the coaxial machine guns was very sensitive for the installation and the shooter, the muzzle brakes of the active type were installed on the machine guns. The muzzle brake was in the form of a kind of parachute. A special disc was placed behind the muzzle brake to protect the shooter from the muzzle wave - later a brake of such a scheme was installed on a large-caliber DShK. Machine guns with a turret were connected through a kingpin. The installation was equipped with a chin rest and a shoulder rest (until 1932, the machine gun had a chest rest). The weight of the DA-2 with loaded magazines and a weather vane was 25 kilograms, the length was 1140 millimeters, the width was 300 millimeters, the distance between the axes of the barrel bores was 193 ± 1 millimeters. It is curious that the DA and DA-2 were adopted by the Air Force Directorate without formalizing the order of the People's Commissariat of Defense. These machine guns were installed on the Tur-5 and Tur-6 turrets, as well as in the aircraft retractable machine-gun turrets. They tried to install DA-2, which has a different sight, on a light tank BT-2. Later, YES, YES-2 and PV-1 were replaced by a special aviation rapid-fire machine gun ShKAS.
Turret TUR-5 for two Degtyarev machine guns. Bags for collecting spent cartridges are clearly visible
The weapons and machine gun trust, which, among other things, was in charge of the Kovrovsky plant, on August 17, 1928. informed the Artillery Directorate of the Red Army about the readiness of a tank machine gun based on the Degtyarev machine gun. On June 12, 1929, after carrying out appropriate tests, the DT tank machine gun ("Degtyareva, tank", also called "tank machine gun of the 1929 model") was adopted as a weapon for armored vehicles and tanks in a ball mount, which was developed by GS. Shpagin. The adoption of this machine gun coincided with the deployment of serial production of tanks - Degtyarev tank replaced the coaxial 6, 5-mm Fedorov tank machine gun already installed on armored vehicles, began to be installed on T-24, MS-1 tanks, BA-27 armored vehicles, on all armored objects.
The tank machine gun Degtyarev lacked a barrel cover. The barrel itself was distinguished by additional turning of the ribs. DP was equipped with a retractable metal butt with a folding shoulder support, a pistol grip, a compact double-row disc magazine for 63 rounds, a sleeve catcher. The fuse and pistol grip were the same as those of the YES. The fuse box, placed on the right above the trigger guard, was made in the form of a check with a beveled axle. The rear position of the flag corresponded to the "fire" state, the front - "fuse". The sight is a diopter rack mount. The diopter was made on a special vertical slider and, using spring-loaded latches, was installed in several fixed positions, which corresponded to ranges of 400, 600, 800 and 1000 meters. The sight was equipped with an adjusting screw for zeroing. The front sight was not installed on the machine gun - it was fixed in the front disc of the ball mount. In some cases, the machine gun was removed from the installation and used outside the car, therefore, a bracket with a front sight and a removable bipod attached to the faceplate were attached to the diesel fuel. The weight of the machine gun with the magazine was 10, 25 kilograms, length - 1138 millimeters, combat rate of fire - 100 rounds per minute.
The Degtyarev tank machine gun was used as a coaxial one with a large-caliber machine gun or a tank gun, as well as on a special anti-aircraft tank installation. Degtyarev tank during the Second World War was often used as a manual one - the combat rate of fire of this machine gun turned out to be twice as high as that of the infantry model.
It should be noted that already at the beginning of the Second World War, an option was being developed to replace the diesel fuel with a "tank" submachine gun with a large ammunition load (developed on the basis of the PPSh). At the end of World War II, the Finns attempted to do the same on captured tanks using their own Suomi. However, in both cases, DT machine guns remained on armored vehicles and tanks. On Soviet tanks, only the SGMT could replace the Degtyarev tank machine gun. An interesting fact is that after the forced "decorative" alteration of armored vehicles and tanks in the Military-Historical Museum of Armored Weapons and Equipment in Kubinka Degtyarev, the tank turned out to be an "international" machine gun - on a large number of foreign vehicles with the help of DT barrels, "native" machine-gun installations are imitated.
Note that in 31, 34 and 38 years of the last century, Degtyarev presented modernized versions of the DP. In 1936, he proposed a lightweight airborne version without a casing, with reinforced ribbing and locking with one lug, in addition, the machine gun was equipped with a compact box magazine with a sector shape. Then the designer presented a machine gun, which has the same store, with the transfer of a reciprocating mainspring to the butt. Both machine guns remained experienced. A sight with the possibility of introducing lateral corrections was experimentally installed on the DP, the DP equipped with an optical sight was tested in 1935 - the idea of supplying light machine guns with an optical sight was popular for a long time, even despite unsuccessful practice.
After the battles on the island of Khasan in 1938, the command staff received a proposal to adopt a light machine gun with a power supply system similar to the Japanese Type 11 machine guns - with a permanent magazine equipped with cartridges from rifle clips. This proposal was actively supported by G. I. Kulik, head of GAU. The Kovrovites presented a variant of the Degtyarev light machine gun with the Razorenov and Kupinov receiver for rifle clips of the 1891/1930 model, but very soon the question of such a receiver was rightly removed - practice forced to abandon the exchange or batch power supply of light machine guns, leaving military specialists and gunsmiths in front of by choosing "tape or store".
For a long time, Degtyarev worked on the creation of a universal (single) and heavy machine gun. In June-August 28, the Artkom, on the instructions of the Headquarters of the Red Army, developed tactical and technical requirements for a new heavy machine gun - for the basis of the machine gun, in order to unify, the Degtyarev infantry machine gun was to be taken under the same cartridge, but having a belt feed. Already in 30, the designer presented an experienced heavy machine gun with a universal Kolesnikov machine, a belt feed receiver (Shpagin's system) and a reinforced barrel radiator. The debugging of the Degtyarev easel machine gun ("Degtyarev, easel", DS) dragged on until the end of the 1930s and did not give positive results. In 1936, Degtyarev presented a universal modification of the DP, which had a lightweight, integral tripod machine and a mount for a folding anti-aircraft ring sight. This sample also did not advance further than the experimental one. The weakness of the standard bipod became the reason for the limited use with the Degtyarev infantry machine gun installation with additional rods, which form a triangular structure with the bipod. The system for locking the barrel and automation, embodied in the Degtyarev machine gun, was also used in the large-caliber machine gun and the experimental automatic rifle developed by Degtyarev. Even the first Degtyarev submachine gun, developed in 1929 with a semi-free bolt, bore the design features of the DP machine gun. The designer sought to implement the idea of Fedorov, his teacher, about a unified family of weapons based on his own system.
At the beginning of the Second World War, in the degtyarevsky KB-2 of the Kovrovsky plant, a so-called "heavy fire installation" was experimentally created - a quadruple DP (DT) installation for arming infantry, cavalry, armored vehicles, light tanks, as well as for the needs of air defense. Machine guns were installed in two rows or in a horizontal plane and were supplied with standard disk magazines or box-type magazines for 20 rounds. In the "anti-aircraft" and "infantry" versions, the installation was mounted on a universal Kolesnikov machine developed for a large-caliber DShK. Rate of fire - 2000 rounds per minute. However, this way of "fighting for rate of fire" did not justify itself, and the effect of recoil on installation and dispersion was too great.
DP machine gun service
The Degtyarev machine gun became the most massive machine gun of the USSR Armed Forces for two decades - and these years were the most "military". The DP machine gun passed its baptism of fire during the conflict on the Chinese Eastern Railway in the border units of the OGPU - therefore, in April 1929, the Kovrov plant received an additional order for the production of these machine guns. The DP machine gun, as part of the troops of the United State Political Administration, fought in Central Asia with the Basmachi gangs. Later, the DP was used by the Red Army in hostilities on the island of Khasan and on the Khalkhin-Gol River. Together with other Soviet weapons, he "took part" in the civil war in Spain (here the DP had to "fight side by side" with its long-time rival - MG13 "Dreise"), in the war in China, in 39-40 years he fought on the Karelian Isthmus. The modifications of DT and DA-2 (on the R-5 and TB-3 aircraft) went almost the same way, so we can say that by the beginning of the Second World War the Degtyarev machine gun had passed combat tests in a variety of conditions.
In rifle divisions, the Degtyarev infantry machine gun was introduced into the rifle platoon and squad, in the cavalry - into the saber squad. In both cases, the light machine gun, along with the rifle grenade launcher, was the main support weapon. DP with a sight notch up to 1.5 thousand meters was intended to destroy important single and open group targets at ranges up to 1, 2 thousand meters, small living single targets - up to 800 meters, defeat low-flying aircraft - up to 500 meters, as well as for support tanks by shelling PTS crews. The shelling of the viewing slots of armored vehicles and enemy tanks was carried out from 100-200 meters. The fire was fired in short bursts of 2-3 shots or bursts of 6 shots, continuous continuous fire was allowed only in extreme cases. Machine gunners with extensive experience could conduct aimed fire with single shots. Calculation of a machine gun - 2 people - a machine gunner ("gunner") and an assistant ("second number"). The assistant carried the magazines in a special box designed for three disks. To bring ammunition to the crew, two more fighters were assigned. For the transportation of the DP in the cavalry, the VD saddle pack was used.
Machine gunner with DP-27 A. Kushnir and fighter with Mosin rifle V. Orlik repel the enemy's attack. Southwestern Front, Kharkov direction
An anti-aircraft tripod of the 1928 model developed for the Maxim machine gun could be used to defeat air targets. They also developed special motorcycle installations: the M-72 motorcycle had a simple swing frame, hinged to the sidecar, boxes with spare parts and discs were placed between the sidecar and the motorcycle and on the trunk. The mount of the machine gun allowed for anti-aircraft fire from the knee without removing it. On the TIZ-AM-600 motorcycle, the DT was mounted above the steering wheel on a special bracket. To reduce the cost of training and the use of small shooting ranges, a 5, 6-mm Blum training machine gun could be attached to the Degtyarev machine gun, which used a rimfire cartridge and an original disk magazine.
The DP machine gun quickly gained popularity, as it successfully combined the power of fire and maneuverability. However, along with the advantages, the machine gun also had some disadvantages, which manifested themselves in the process of operation. First of all, this concerned the inconvenience of operation and the peculiarities of the equipment of the disk magazine. Quick replacement of a hot barrel was complicated by the lack of a handle on it, as well as the need to separate the pipe and bipod. The replacement even in favorable conditions for a trained crew took about 30 seconds. An open gas chamber located under the barrel prevented carbon deposits from accumulating in the gas outlet, but together with an open bolt frame increased the likelihood of clogging on sandy soils. Clogging of the socket of the gas piston and screwing of its head caused the movable part to not reach the front extreme position. However, the automatics of the machine gun as a whole demonstrated a fairly high reliability. The attachment of the sling swivel and bipod was unreliable and created additional clinging details that made it less convenient to carry. Working with the gas regulator was also inconvenient - for its rearrangement, the cotter pin was removed, the nut was unscrewed, the regulator was set back, turned and re-fastened. It was possible to fire while moving only using a belt, and the absence of a forearm and a large magazine made such shooting inconvenient. The machine gunner put on a belt in the form of loops around his neck, fastened it in front of the store on the cutout of the casing with a swivel, and a mitten was needed to hold the machine gun by the casing.
In the armament of rifle divisions, the share of machine guns constantly increased, primarily due to light machine guns - if in 1925 the rifle division by 15, 3 thousand people. personnel had 74 heavy machine guns, then already in 1929 for 12, 8 thousand people. there were 81 light and 189 heavy machine guns. In 1935, these figures for 13 thousand people already amounted to 354 light and 180 heavy machine guns. In the Red Army, as in some other armies, the light machine gun was the main means of saturating the troops with automatic weapons. The state from April 1941 (the last pre-war) provided for the following ratios:
wartime rifle division - for 14483 people. the personnel had 174 easel and 392 light machine guns;
reduced-strength division - by 5864 people. the personnel had 163 easel and 324 light machine guns;
mountain rifle division - for 8,829 people. the personnel had 110 easel and 314 light machine guns.
Soviet assault squad in steel bibs CH-42 and with DP-27 machine guns. Assault guardsmen after completing a combat mission. 1st ShISBr. 1st Belorussian Front, summer 1944
DP was in service with the cavalry, marines, and the NKVD troops. The Second World War, which began in Europe, a clear percentage increase in the number of automatic weapons in the German Wehrmacht, the ongoing reorganization of the Red Army required an increase in the production of tank and light machine guns, as well as changes in the organization of production. In 1940, they began to increase the production capacity of light machine guns used in the production. By this time, they had already worked out the technology of manufacturing barrel bores by rolling, which made it possible to accelerate several times and significantly reduce the cost of production of barrels - together with the transition to the use of barrels with a cylindrical smooth outer surface, it played an important role in increasing the output and reducing the cost of Degtyarev's infantry machine guns. The order for 1941, approved on February 7, included 39,000 Degtyarev infantry and tank machine guns. From April 17, 1941, the OGK for the production of DT and DP machine guns worked at the Kovrov Plant No. 2. From April 30, the production of DP machine guns was deployed in the new building "L". The People's Commissariat of Armaments gave the new production the rights of a branch of the enterprise (later - a separate Kovrov Mechanical Plant).
From 1939 to mid-1941, the number of light machine guns in the troops increased by 44%, on June 22, 41, there were 170, 4 thousand light machine guns in the Red Army. This type of weapon was one of those, which the connections of the western districts were provided even in excess of the state. For example, in the Fifth Army of the Kiev Special Military District, the manning of light machine guns was about 114.5%. During this period, Degtyarev's tank machine guns received an interesting application - by the Directive of the General Staff of May 16, 1941, 50 newly formed tank regiments of mechanized corps received cannons before being equipped with tanks to combat enemy armored vehicles, as well as 80 DT machine guns per regiment for self-defense. Degtyarev tank during the war was also placed on combat snowmobiles.
With the beginning of the Second World War, the obsolete DA-2 found a new application - as anti-aircraft machine guns to combat aircraft flying at low altitude. On July 16, 1941, Osipov, Head of the Main Directorate of Air Defense, wrote to Yakovlev, the Head of GAU: the same PV-1 machine guns removed from the aircraft”. For this, the DA and DA-2 machine guns were installed on a 1928 model anti-aircraft tripod through a kingpin - in particular, such installations were used near Leningrad in 1941. The weather vane was replaced with a circular one from a machine-gun anti-aircraft sight. In addition, the DA-2 was installed on the U-2 (Po-2) light night bomber.
During the Second World War, shop # 1 of plant # 2 became the main manufacturer of Degtyarev's infantry and tank machine guns, their production was also delivered in the Urals, DP and at the Arsenal plant (Leningrad). In the conditions of military production, it was necessary to reduce the requirements for finishing small arms - for example, finishing processing of external parts was canceled, and parts that were not involved in the operation of automation. In addition, the norms of spare parts were reduced - instead of 22 disks for each machine gun laid down before the start of the war, only 12 were given. Despite this, all technological documentation was carried out "according to letter B", that is, it required strict adherence to all standards and did not allow changes in the shape, materials of parts and dimensions at all factories involved in production. The release of light machine guns, despite the difficult conditions, remained relatively stable. V. N. Novikov, Deputy People's Commissar of Armaments, wrote in his memoirs: "This machine gun did not cause much tension in the People's Commissariat of Armaments." For the second half of 1941, the troops received 45,300 light machine guns, in 42 - 172,800, in 43 - 250,200, in 44 - 179700. As of May 9, 1945, the active army had 390,000 light machine guns. Throughout the war, the loss of light machine guns amounted to 427, 5 thousand pieces, that is, 51, 3% of the total resource (taking into account the supplies supplied during the war and pre-war reserves).
The scale of the use of machine guns can be judged by the following figures. GAU in the period from July to November 1942 of the year transferred 5,302 machine guns of all types to the fronts of the southwestern direction. In March-July 1943, in preparation for the Battle of Kursk, the troops of the Steppe, Voronezh, Central Fronts and the Eleventh Army received 31.6 thousand light and heavy machine guns. The troops that went on the offensive near Kursk had 60, 7 thousand machine guns of all types. In April 1944, by the beginning of the Crimean operation, the troops of the Separate Primorsky Army, the Fourth Ukrainian Front and air defense units had 10622 heavy and light machine guns (approximately 1 machine gun for 43 personnel). In the armament of the infantry, the proportion of machine guns also changed. If a rifle company in July 1941 had 6 light machine guns across the state, a year later - 12 light machine guns, in 1943 - 1 easel and 18 light machine guns, and in December 44 - 2 easel and 12 light machine guns. That is, during the war, the number of machine guns in a rifle company, the main tactical unit, more than doubled. If in July 1941 the rifle division had 270 machine guns of various types in service, then in December of the same year - 359, a year later this figure was already - 605, and in June 1945 - 561. The decrease in the share of machine guns by the end of the war is due to with an increase in the number of submachine guns. Applications for light machine guns decreased, so from January 1 to May 10, 1945, only 14,500 were delivered (in addition, at this time, upgraded DPs were supplied). By the end of the war, the rifle regiment had 108 light and 54 heavy machine guns for 2,398 people.
A Soviet machine gunner fires from a DP-27 light machine gun. A. E. Porozhnyakov "The Great Patriotic War"
In the course of the war, the rules for the use of the machine gun were also revised, although in relation to the light ones this was required to a lesser extent. The 1942 Infantry Fighting Regulations established the range of opening fire from a light machine gun from a range of 800 meters, but surprise fire from a range of 600 meters was also recommended as the most effective. In addition, the division of the battle formation into "holding down" and "shock" groups was canceled. Now the light machine gun operated in various conditions in the platoon and squad chain. Now the main fire for him was considered to be in short bursts, the combat rate of fire was equal to 80 rounds per minute.
Ski units in winter conditions carried machine guns "Maxim" and DP on drag boats in a state of readiness to open fire. To drop machine guns to partisans and paratroopers, a parachute landing bag PDMM-42 was used. At the beginning of the war, paratroopers-machine gunners had already mastered jumping with Degtyarev's standard infantry machine guns on a belt, instead of him they often used a "manual" version of a more compact tank machine gun, with a larger magazine, which was less susceptible to death. In general, the Degtyarev machine gun turned out to be a very reliable weapon. Opponents also recognized this - for example, captured DPs were readily used by Finnish machine gunners.
However, the experience of using the Degtyarev infantry machine gun indicated the need for a lighter and more compact model while maintaining ballistic characteristics. In 1942, a competition was announced for the development of a new light machine gun system, the weight of which does not exceed 7.5 kilograms. From 6 to 21 July 1942, experimental machine guns developed at the Degtyarev Design Bureau (with magazine and belt feed), as well as the development of Vladimirov, Simonov, Goryunov, as well as novice designers, including Kalashnikov, passed field tests. All samples presented in these tests received a list of comments on revision, however, as a result, the competition did not give an acceptable sample.
DPM light machine gun
The work on the modernization of the Degtyarev infantry machine gun was more successful, especially since the production of the modernized version can be carried out much faster. At that time, several design teams were working at the plant No. 2, solving their own range of tasks. And if KB-2, under the leadership of V. A. Degtyareva, mainly worked on new designs, then the tasks of modernizing the manufactured samples were solved in the Department of the Chief Designer. Work on the modernization of machine guns was directed by A. I. Shilin, however, Degtyarev himself did not let them out of sight. Under his control, a group of designers, which included P. P. Polyakov, A. A. Dubynin, A. I. Skvortsov A. G. Belyaev, carried out work on the modernization of the DP in 1944. The main goal of these works was to increase the controllability and reliability of the machine gun. N. D. Yakovlev, head of GAU, and D. F. Ustinov, People's Commissar of Arms, in August 1944 was submitted for approval by the State. Of the Defense Committee changes made to the design, while indicating: In connection with the design changes in the modernized machine guns:
- the survivability of the reciprocating mainspring is increased, it became possible to replace it without removing the machine gun from the firing position;
- the possibility of losing bipods is excluded;
- accuracy and accuracy of fire improves;
- the usability in combat conditions is improved."
By a decision of the State Defense Committee of October 14, 1944, the changes were approved. The machine gun was adopted under the designation DPM ("Degtyareva, infantry, modernized").
Differences of the DPM machine gun:
- the reciprocating mainspring from under the barrel, where it heated up and gave a draft, was transferred to the rear of the receiver (they tried to transfer the spring back in 1931, this can be seen from the experienced Degtyarev machine gun presented at that time). To install the spring, a tubular rod was put on the drummer's tail, and a guide tube was inserted into the butt plate, which protruded above the butt neck. In this regard, the coupling was excluded, and the rod was manufactured as a single piece with the piston. In addition, the order of disassembly has changed - now it began with a guide tube and a reciprocating mainspring. The same changes were made to the Degtyarev tank machine gun (DTM). This made it possible to disassemble the machine gun and fix minor malfunctions without removing it from the ball mount;
- installed a pistol grip in the form of a slope, which was welded to the trigger guard, and two wooden cheeks attached to it with screws;
- simplified the shape of the butt;
- on a light machine gun, instead of an automatic fuse, a non-automatic flag fuse was introduced, similar to the Degtyarev tank machine gun - the beveled axis of the fuse check was under the trigger lever. Locking took place at the forward position of the flag. This fuse was more reliable, as it acted on the sear, which made it safer to carry a loaded machine gun;
- the leaf spring in the ejection mechanism has been replaced by a helical cylindrical one. The ejector was installed in the bolt socket, and a pin was used to hold it, which also served as its axis;
- the folding bipods were made integral, and the attachment hinges were moved slightly back and higher relative to the axis of the barrel bore. On the upper part of the casing, a clamp was installed from two welded plates, which formed lugs, for attaching the legs of the bipod with screws. The bipod has become stronger. There was no need to detach their barrel to replace them;
- The mass of the machine gun has decreased.
Degtyarev system light machine gun (DPM) mod. 1944 year
The upgraded Degtyarev tank machine gun was put into service at the same time - October 14, 1944, the production of diesel fuel was stopped on January 1, 1945. Some of the lightly loaded parts, such as the retractable butt of the DT machine gun, to reduce the cost, were made by cold stamping. During the work, a variant of the PDM with a retractable butt, as in the diesel fuel, was proposed, however, they settled on a wooden permanent butt, as more reliable and convenient. In addition, it was proposed to equip the upgraded Degtyarev tank machine gun with a weighted barrel with longitudinal lobes (as in the experienced DS-42), but this option was also abandoned. In total, in the period from 1941 to 1945, 809,823 DP, DT, DPM and DTM machine guns were produced at the Kovrov Plant No. 2.
In addition to the Soviet Union, DP (DPM) machine guns were in service with the armies of the GDR, China, Vietnam, Cuba, DPRK, Poland, Mongolia, Somalia, Seychelles. The DPM machine gun in China was produced under the designation "Type 53", this version was used in Vietnam, was in service with the Albanian army.
"Degtyarev infantry" in service with the Soviet Army replaced the new Degtyarev RPD light machine gun for an intermediate 7, 62-mm cartridge of the 1943 model. The DP and DP stocks remaining in the warehouses "surfaced" in the 80s - 90s during the post-perestroika military conflicts. These machine guns also fought in Yugoslavia.
Model 1946 company machine gun (RP-46)
The large dead weight and bulkiness of the disk magazine of the Degtyarev machine gun caused repeated attempts to replace it with a belt feed both before the beginning of the Second World War, and during it. In addition, the belt feed made it possible to increase the fire power in short periods of time and thereby fill the gap between the capabilities of the easel and light machine guns. The war revealed the desire to increase the density of antipersonnel fire in the most important areas - if in 42, in defense, the density of rifle and machine gun fire per linear meter of the front was from 3 to 5 bullets, then in the summer of 1943, during the Battle of Kursk, this figure was already 13-14 bullets …
In total, for the machine gun of the Degtyarev infantry machine guns (including the modernized one), 7 variants of the receiver for the tape were developed. Locksmiths-debuggers P. P. Polyakov and A. A. Dubinin in 1942 for the DP light machine gun developed another version of the receiver for a metal or canvas tape. In June of the same year, machine guns with this receiver (parts were stamped) were tested at the GAU test site, but they were returned for revision. Degtyarev presented two versions of the receiver for the tape in 1943 (in one of the versions, the drum receiver of the Shpagin scheme was used). But the heavy weight of the machine gun, which reached 11 kilograms, the inconvenience of using the power supply system, as well as the workload of the Kovrov plant No. 2 with more pressing orders, became the reason for the interruption of this work.
However, work in this direction was not completely stopped. The successful development of the belt feed in the RPD machine gun was the basis for the resumption of work on the introduction of a similar feed for the DPM under rifle cartridges. In May 1944, the standard DP and the modernized DPM, which had not yet been accepted for service, were tested, equipped with a receiver developed by P. P. Polyakov and A. A. Dubinin - permanent participants in the modernization of the "Infantry Degtyarev" - under the leadership of the designer Shilin, with the participation of the locksmith-debugger Lobanov. As a result, this version of the receiver was adopted.
The mechanism for feeding the link metal tape was driven by the movement of the bolt handle during its movement - a similar principle was used in the 12, 7-mm DShK machine gun, but now the movement of the handle was transmitted to the receiver through a special sliding bracket, and not through the swinging arm. The tape is a link metal, with a closed link. Feed - right. A special tray served to guide the tape. The latch of the receiver lid was located similarly to the latch of the magazines on the DP (DPM). The barrel was weighted down to allow firing in long bursts. The new barrel, the need for a tape feed drive and the effort to feed cartridges from the tape required changes to the design of the gas outlet assembly. The design, controls and layout of the machine gun were otherwise the same as that of the base DPM. The rate of fire reached 250 rounds per minute, which was three times higher than the rate of fire of the DPM and was comparable to heavy machine guns. In terms of the effectiveness of fire at ranges of up to 1000 meters, it was close to single and heavy machine guns, although the absence of a machine tool did not give the same controllability and accuracy.
On May 24, 1946, a machine gun modernized in this way was adopted by a decree of the Council of Ministers of the USSR under the designation "7, 62-mm company machine gun, model 1946 (RP-46)". RP-46 was the last offspring of the unified "DP family" (RPD, although it was a development of the same scheme, became a fundamentally new weapon). The name "company machine gun" indicates the desire to fill the niche of automatic weapons of support of the company level - heavy machine guns were the means of the battalion commander, light machine guns were in platoons and squads. According to their characteristics, the easel machine guns did not correspond to the increased mobility of the infantry, they could only act on the flanks or in the second line, they rarely provided timely and sufficient support to the front lines of the infantry in the conditions of the increased transience and maneuverability of the battle - especially on rough terrain, settlements and mountains. At the same time, a light machine gun of the same caliber did not develop fire of the required power. In fact, it was about the temporary replacement of the "single" machine gun, which was still absent in the armament system, or - about the next step towards the creation of a single domestic machine gun. The RP-46 machine gun, which was 3 times lighter than the SGM, significantly surpassed this standard machine gun in maneuverability. In addition, the RP-46 was included in the armament complex of light armored vehicles (airborne ASU-57) as an auxiliary self-defense weapon.
The combination of a system tested in production and a receiver assembled from cold stamping parts made it possible to quickly establish the production of a new machine gun. The tape feed reduced the weight of the ammunition carried by the crew - if the RP-46 without cartridges weighed 2.5 kg more than the DP, then the total weight of the RP-46 with the 500 rounds of ammunition was 10 kilograms less than that of the DP that had the same supply of cartridges. The machine gun was equipped with a folding shoulder support and a carrying handle. But a separate cartridge box caused difficulties in battle, since changing the position of the RP-46 in most cases required removing the tape and loading it in a new position.
RP-46 has been in service for 15 years. He and the easel SGM were replaced by a single PC machine gun. In addition to the USSR, the RP-46 was in service in Algeria, Albania, Angola, Bulgaria, Benin, Kampuchea, Congo, China, Cuba, Libya, Nigeria, Togo, Tanzania. In China, a copy of the RP-46 was produced under the designation "Type 58", and in the DPRK - "Type 64". Although the RP-46 was significantly inferior to its “parent” in terms of production, it is still found in some countries today.
Technical characteristics of the RP-46 machine gun:
Cartridge - 7, 62-mm model 1908/30 (7, 62x53);
Weight - 13 kg (with belt equipped);
The length of the machine gun with a flash suppressor - 1272 mm;
Barrel length - 605 mm;
Length of the rifled barrel - 550 mm;
Rifling - 4 rectangular, right-handed;
Rifling stroke length - 240 mm;
Bullet muzzle velocity (heavy) - 825 m / s;
Sighting range - 1500 m;
Direct shot range - 500 m;
The range of the lethal action of the bullet is 3800 m;
Sighting line length - 615 mm;
Rate of fire - 600 rounds per minute;
Combat rate of fire - up to 250 rounds per minute;
Food - metal tape for 200/250 rounds;
Weight of the equipped belt - 8, 33/9, 63 kg;
Calculation - 2 people.